Tombstone by JOSEF and JOYCE MUENCH
HISTORIC PANORAMAS XX Tombstone By JOSEF and JOYCE MUENCH From this early mining town in southeastern Arizona has come the rich tradition of the Old West—the wickedness, gun-play, feud between law and outlaw, stage holdups and Indian raids. Even with surface changes of electric lights and paved streets, Tombstone is history, from the Bird Cage Theater (now a museum), the Crystal Palace saloon, the newspaper Epitaph, and the world-famous Lady Banksia Rose to Boothill Cemetery at the edge of town. Most of the early buildings date from 1879 to 1882. Two years before the first date Ed Schieffelin discovered the Lucky Cuss, instead of the tombstone he had been warned was all he could expect in the area. The early 1880s witnessed the Earp-Clanton feud, climaxed by the notorious battle at the O.K. Corral. It was after this that Sheriff Slaughter ordered crooks out of town and saw to it that they went. Water in the mines, still believed to hoard riches, closed them down, but Tombstone, "the town too tough to die," is now a pleasant resort community with an incomparable cli- mate and all its glowing memories. DESERT MAGAZINE DESERT CALENDAR September 27-October 5—New Mex- ico State Fair, Albuquerque. October 1-5—San Bernardino County Fair, Victorville, California. October 1-10—Aspencades to Carson National Forest, from Taos, N.M. October 2-5—Eighth Annual Desert Empire Fair, Ridgecrest, Calif. October 3-4—Candlelight Procession on 3rd, Feast Day of St. Francis de Assissi on 4th, Ranchos de Taos and Santa Fe.
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